Autopsy.io is the anti-Product Hunt: A graveyard of startup failures

Thankfully, Autopsy.io isn’t “Uber for hearses”. Rather, it’s a newly-launched site that collects stories of startup failure, with the aim of sharing the lessons learned with the whole community.

The great thing about the project – which is growing daily – is the bluntness of founders’ reflections on their shuttered startups, with reasons ranging from the brutally personal (“We were naive idiots.”) to the geopolitical (“Consequence of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.”)

The idea came from a conversation between Mazraei and Davies about the former’s failing startup, Rella. Patel explains:

Inspired by sites like BetaList and Product Hunt, they thought it would be helpful to create a site documenting lessons from failed startups – ‘Shit Startup: What we wish we knew before we fucked up our businesses.’

While the idea came up in September 2014, it wasn’t until earlier this year that the trio got around to making it a reality.

It’s worth noting that profane sites on the startup failure have a heritage. Philip Kaplan’s Fucked Company was the grandfather of the genre, chronicling tech disasters in the days of the first dotcom boom.

Ironically, the first version of Autopsy.io didn’t work. Patel says:

After a few hours work, we had the first version of the website ready. But it never really took off. The name was average and the site was worse.

They scrapped that version and started again with the current name and simple spreadsheet design.

This time it flew, reaching the top spot on HackerNews and Product Hunt, and receiving love from big names in the startup world.

https://twitter.com/pmarca/status/607030089692233728

The team hopes Autopsy will remain a positive place for entrepreneurs and founders to learn from startups that didn’t go the distance. They’re also planning an email newsletter, which you can sign up for on the site.

I think the project makes an excellent companion piece to the fizzing excitement of Product Hunt. It’s not glorying in schadenfreude at other entrepreneurs’ failures, but creating a repository of shared knowledge on mistakes to avoid.